Roger Stone’s Weird ‘Batman and Joker’ Fetish with Eliot Spitzer

Roger Stone’s Weird ‘Batman and Joker’ Fetish with Eliot Spitzer

Eliot Spitzer, former Governor of New York, was the vigilante, the caped crusader of Wall Street, who fell from grace in a way that resembles a Formula One comic book action movie. In 2008, NYC headlines read Eliot Spitzer “Savior or Satan,” the typical sort of journalism that you would expect from Gotham city in a Batman movie.

What external enemy can discover Batman‘s only weakness? None other than the clown make-up wearing Trickster him-self, whose name is simply “The Joker.” The Joker is an agent of Chaos.

The real life counterpart to the Joker would have to be Roger Stone, a GOP political operative and a real agent of Chaos.

It shouldn’t be a shocker that all politicians have a carnal appetite for bimbos and cocaine. But in Eliot Spitzer‘s case, he presented himself as not only upholding the law as attorney general, but literally being the law himself, in the volatile and corrupt rotten apple of NY.

Roger Stone chould not help himself but to portray himself as Batman’s nemesis. These are some of the things the media said about the hero and the villain during the “Luv Gov” scandal of 2008.

NBC Today said about Spitzer:

New York’s attorney general; his audacious, media-grabbing crusades against corporate corruption and greed; his ascent to the national stage as the moralizing “Sheriff of Wall Street.”

The New York Times called Spitzer “The tireless reformer compared to Batman’s alter ego, Bruce Wayne”

“Out from under Spitzer’s cape” March 15, 2008:

When he (Johnson) first ran for (a) state Senate ..campaign, (Spitzer)..mailings depicted Craig Johnson as Robin to Gov. Eliot Spitzer’s Batman.

Peter Elkind, author of Client 9.

Spitzer’s private and public paths had taken him into strange, treacherous terrain: lonely, intoxicating worlds of sex, power, and politics.. become target practice for a dirty-trickster consultant, who cast himself as the Joker tormenting Spitzer’s Batman.”

In Netflix’s documentary version of Client 9, Roger Stone makes it clear that he is the Batman’s arch-nemesis “the Joker.” Stone dressed in Jack Nicholson’s version of The Joker, with red lipstick and green hair, and there was a caption that read:

Ever dance with the devil in the pale moonlight?

Stone dressed as Clown Prince Of Crime.

Whatever you do, don’t ask the mob fixer clown, the “Joker” to see his “pencil trick.”

Not only did he have a weakness for escort girls, but he used the same company, Emperor Escort Service, which he had earlier prosecuted against as Attorney General.

Eliot Spitzer was caught on camera with a call girl name Asheley Dupre at the Mayweather, who he only had seen one time, and she become a national poster girl for the scandal. The story broke March 10, 2008.

Before the story broke on November 19, 2007, Stone wrote a letter to the FBI about how Spitzer wore calf-length black socks while having sex with high-profile prostitutes.

Stone met Irma at Miami Velvet, a swingers night club that plays Madonna around the clock. He asked her what she does for a living and she responded “I’m a call girl but I’m not working tonight.” Then Stone asked about her clientele. She responded, “the governor of New Jersey,” Stone said “you had a date with Jon Corzine” she responded “no, I had a date with Elliot Spitzer.”

Irma seems to have just fallen into Stone’s lap, when Stone was searching for ammo to nail Spietzer to a wall. Irma told Stone the black socks story about how Spitzer wears black socks while having sex. Stone’s respond was that Spitzer is a weirdo, which is rich coming from a cuck swinger freak who dresses up like a clown and self-identifies as a “tri-sexual” who will try anything once.

The calf-length black socks were all a part of Spitzer’s Batman costume, along with a New York Yankees hat. The hat’s visor was supposed to block his face from being recognized while having sex with prostitutes. Spitzer couldn’t let anyone at the Emperor’s Club recognize him, otherwise they would have a golden opportunity to destroy him, and I’m sure they would want revenge on him. The baseball cap wasn’t to cover his bald head.

Eliot Spitzer didn’t want to talk to the girls at all, but rather just go up to the room with them and bypass the chit-chat. If Spitzer was forced to engage in a conversation with a hooker, he would look down to the ground so that his Yankee’s cap would block his eyes, in an attempt to not be recognized as the governor of New York. But when Eliot asked about social ideas or heard about class struggle from the call girls, his eyes would light up, and he would get real engaged and passionate about the conversation, as if he was being interviewed running for office, according to his number one call girl Angelina.

Imagine Bruce Wayne with only his Batman mask on and his black socks having paid sex with Harley Quinn. That’s how I see the “Luv Guv” scandal.

However, there is a darker romance that most people wouldn’t see with the naked eye. Roger Stone gives a vibe that he feels there was a sick sort of symbiotic, mutual relationship between Spitzer and himself during the scandal.

There was more to the story than just Stone wanting to destroy the reputation of the caped crusader. Stone emotionally and mentally needs a nemesis for a hate-love fatal attraction in order to give him purpose in life.

It best described in the 2008 Batman movie called Dark Knight, which came out the same year as the scandal, whereing Heath Ledger’s Joker told Batman, “Kill you? What would I do without you? You complete me.”